McCartney v. Burns

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJune 18, 2025
Docket21-cv-1474
StatusUnknown

This text of McCartney v. Burns (McCartney v. Burns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCartney v. Burns, (Vt. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

7ermont Superior Court Filed 06/11 25 Franklin

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Franklin Unit Case No. 21-CV-01474 17 Church Street St. Albans VT 05478 802-524-7993 www.vermontjudiciary.org

Misty McCartney v. David Burns, et al

FINDINGS, CONCLUSIONS, AND ORDER

In this case, Plaintiff Misty McCartney seeks declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as

damages under various legal theories, all arising out of an ongoing dispute over rights with respect to a

driveway located partially on her property and partially on the neighboring property owned by Defendants David Burns and Melissa Haberman. Defendants counterclaimed, seeking essentially

mirror-image relief. The parties tried the declaratory and injunctive relief claims in this case to the court over two days in June of 2024; the remaining claims were set over for jury trial. Before that trial

could occur, the parties agreed to waive jury and try their remaining claims to the court. Accordingly, the court then ruled on the claims for declaratory and injunctive relief, reserving findings until after the

close of the evidence on the remaining claims. Trial on those claims commenced on October 28, 2024 and continued on October 29, 2024; the trial was then suspended due to a medical emergency. Trial concluded on February 26, 2025. At the

conclusion of the evidence, both parties moved to conform the pleadings with the evidence, asserting cross-claims for nuisance; the court granted the request. Subsequently, on its own motion, and with the consent of the parties, the court further conformed the pleadings to the proof to set forth claims for

reformation of the parties' deeds. Both parties submitted proposed findings and conclusions. Having

received and reviewed those submissions, the court issues the following findings, conclusions, and order all by a preponderance of the credible evidence. FINDINGS The parties own neighboring properties, with the gravel drive at the heart of this case between them. The gravel drive is located substantially on Ms. McCartney's property, with approximately three

feet of its width located on Defendants'. The gravel drive has never been properly delineated; as with

many dirt drives, its bounds have varied over time. Both parties, in their pleadings, admit that this is a "shared" drive.

Findings, Conclusions, and Order Page 1 of 11 21-CV-01474 Misty McCartney v. David Burns, et al 7ermont Superior Court Filed 06/11 25 Franklin

The two properties are located south and west of Route 118 Ms. McCartney's to the northwest of Defendants'. Defendants also own a property to the southeast of the property at issue

here; they reside in that property and rent out the subject property (for the sake of clarity, the court refers to the subject property as the "Rental Property," and Defendants' neighboring property as

"Defendants'' home property"). Ms. McCartney's property consists of an irregularly shaped lot on which sit a house and barn, with the house closer to the road and the barn offset slightly behind it. The Rental Property also consists of an irregularly shaped lot on which sit a house and barn, again with the house closer to the road and the barn directly behind it. The house sits on what has been called Parcel

One, a parcel that is rectilinear on all but the streetfront side; the barn sits on Parcel Two, a rectilinear

parcel that is 12 feet narrower on Ms. McCartney's side than Parcel One. To put it another way, the property line between the two properties makes a 12-foot jog to the left at the southwest corner of Parcel One Ms. McCartney's title dates back to one W.G. Mansfield, who in 1905 owned both Ms.

McCartney's property and the Rental Property. At that time, Mansfield conveyed Parcel One of the Rental Property to Rushford, retaining what became Ms. McCartney's property and what subsequently became Parcel Two of the Rental Property. In this conveyance, Mansfield reserved a right of way, over

Parcel One, "at any and all times for the purpose of removing manure from my barn and shed and

adjoining thereto." Precisely where the barn and shed were located does not appear; the evidence supports the inference that the "barn" was what is now Defendants' barn on Parcel 2, and the "shed," what is now Ms. McCartney's barn on the rear of her parcel.

In 1920, one M.H. Downey, who evidently then held title to Parcel One by virtue of a decree

from the Probate Court, conveyed the parcel to Hattie Haile. The deed specifically reserved the right of

way reserved in the deed from Mansfield to Rushford. Subsequent deeds in Defendants' chain of title are silent with respect to the right of way. There is no evidence, however, that it was ever abandoned.

After the conveyance of Parcel One to Rushford, it appears that Mansfield continued to own Ms. McCartney's parcel, as well as Parcel Two of the Rental Property. While the full chain of title is not in the record, it appears that the property passed to Abbie Jo Mansfield (W.G.'s widow'). In 1937,

her Administrator conveyed the property to Richard H. Pond. It then passed, through a series of

conveyances, to Jesse Noble Gilbert and Ruth Noble Gilbert. In 1974, the Gilberts conveyed Parcel Two, through a straw transaction involving a local

attorney, to Marion Towle, who then owned Parcel One. The conveyance of Parcel Two included "a

right of way twenty feet (20') in width for ingress and egress of vehicular and pedestrian traffic, to be

Findings, Conclusions, and Order Page 2 of 11 21-CV-01474 Misty McCartney v. David Burns, et al 7ermont Superior Court Filed 06/11 25 Franklin

used in common with the grantors, their heirs and assigns. The width of said right of way shall be

measured from the northerly edge of [Parcel One]." Clearly, however, whoever described this right of

way did so with complete ignorance of the actual boundary line of Parcel One or the location of what eventually became Ms. McCartney's house; the "northerly edge of [Parcel One]" is a mere 11 feet from Ms. McCartney's house. Indeed, the distance between the two houses is only slightly more than 22 feet.

With the conveyance of Parcel Two to Marion Towle, title to Parcels One and Two merged,

passing through an intermediate deed to Arthur and Erin St. Onge to J ames Healy, who took title on June 1, 2001. Prior to that transfer, on August 30, 2000, Defendant Haberman and her then co-owner

conveyed an easement over Defendants' home property to the St. Onges for a shared right of way to be used as a driveway. That easement ran with the land and so transferred to Healy when he acquired the

property; in fact, the deed from St. Onge to Healy expressly conveyed the right of way. Healy owned the property until he executed a deed in lieu of foreclosure on March 10, 2016 significantly, just shy of 15 years. Defendants acquired the property in August 2016, and have owned it since. Defendants never occupied the Rental Property; since approximately three years after their acquisition of the

property, Defendants have used it as a rental. In the meanwhile, Ms. McCartney's property passed through two intermediate deeds to

Christopher McLernon, who purchased it on October 15, 2004. For the entire time that McLernon owned the property, there was a gravel drive located between the two properties. Healy and his tenants used the drive with the understanding that it was a resource shared by the two neighboring properties.

Without objection from McLernon, Healy would park one car alongside his house and another

alongside his barn.

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McCartney v. Burns, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccartney-v-burns-vtsuperct-2025.